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      Is Gcn4-induced autophagy the ultimate downstream mechanism by which hormesis extends yeast replicative lifespan?

      research-article
      1 , 1 , 1 , +
      Current genetics
      aging, yeast, autophagy, hormesis, Gcn4

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          Abstract

          The number of times a cell divides before irreversibly arresting is termed replicative lifespan. Despite discovery of many chemical, dietary and genetic interventions that extend replicative lifespan, usually first discovered in budding yeast and subsequently shown to apply to metazoans, there is still little understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms involved. One unifying theme is that most, if not all, interventions that extend replicative lifespan induce “hormesis”, where a little inflicted damage makes cells more able to resist similar challenges in the future. One of the many cellular changes that occur during hormesis is a global reduction in protein synthesis, which has been linked to enhanced longevity in many organisms. Our recent study in budding yeast found that it was not the reduction in protein synthesis per se, but rather the subsequent induction of the conserved Gcn4 transcriptional regulator and its ability to induce autophagy that was responsible for extending replicative lifespan. We propose that Gcn4-dependent induction of autophagy occurring downstream of reduced global protein synthesis may be a unifying molecular mechanism for many interventions that extend replicative lifespan.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          8004904
          2877
          Curr Genet
          Curr. Genet.
          Current genetics
          0172-8083
          1432-0983
          15 March 2019
          23 January 2019
          June 2019
          01 June 2020
          : 65
          : 3
          : 717-720
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Weill Cornell Medicine, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, New York, NY 10065, USA
          Author notes
          Article
          PMC6511304 PMC6511304 6511304 nihpa1519416
          10.1007/s00294-019-00936-4
          6511304
          30673825
          5de968f9-4966-4352-a04e-5faec27fed00
          History
          Categories
          Article

          hormesis,aging,yeast,Gcn4,autophagy
          hormesis, aging, yeast, Gcn4, autophagy

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